Can you ever have
too many scone recipes? Here’s one for savory, zesty scones that are the perfect
accompaniment for salads, soups, stews, eggs, you name it. Za’atar has been
mentioned in a number of recipes at Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen over the years. I
think Leslie Budewitz likes it as much as I do. Among other recipes she’s
posted with za’atar are her Red
Pepper and Orzo Soup and Turkish
Scrambled Eggs with Tomato. Za’atar is one of those seasonings that varies
depending on the brand or country of origin. I’ve included an easy recipe,
below, to make your own.
Za’atar
Feta Scones
Dry Ingredients
2 cups all-purpose
flour
2 1/2 teaspoons
baking powder
1/4 teaspoon baking
soda
1/2 teaspoon kosher
salt
1 tablespoon za’atar
seasoning (store bought or homemade according to recipe below)
Zest of 1 lemon
1 1/2 ounces
shredded cheddar cheese
4 ounces crumbled
feta cheese
1/2 cup butter cut
into 1/4-inch cubes and chilled (or frozen)
Wet
ingredients
1 large egg
1/3 cup plain,
thick Greek yogurt
Juice of 1 lemon
To
sprinkle on top
2 tablespoons milk
or cream
1 teaspoon toasted
sesame seeds (optional if, like me, you ran out)
1 teaspoon za’atar
seasoning
Homemade
za’atar seasoning
1 teaspoon each dried
thyme (or oregano), cumin, coriander, toasted sesame seeds, and sumac.
Rounded 1/8
teaspoon kosher salt
1/8 teaspoon red
pepper flakes
Mix all ingredients
together. Store leftover za’atar in an airtight jar.
Directions
Preheat oven to 400
degrees F.
In a medium bowl,
combine dry ingredients, except butter and cheeses. Use a pastry blender to cut
the butter into the flour mixture until the butter is the size of green peas. Add
cheeses and toss to thoroughly coat with flour.
In a small bowl,
whisk together the wet ingredients. Make a well in the flour mixture and pour whisked
wet ingredients into it.
Gently fold the flour into the wet ingredients until the flour is taken up and you can get your hands in the bowl to knead a few times and form a ball.
Transfer the ball
to a pizza pan lined with parchment paper. Gently pat the ball into a flat disk,
about 8 inches across, keeping the edges neat.
Brush the disk with the milk or cream and then sprinkle with the sesame seeds and za’atar.
Cut the disk into
eight pie wedges but don’t separate them.
Bake the scones for
fifteen minutes, then remove from oven and gently separate the wedges with a
pie server so that air can circulate around them.
Return to the oven and bake 8 to 10 minutes more.
🍂🍂🍂
Take time this fall to curl up
with a trio of cozies – a drink, a treat, and a good book. May I suggest a bit
of armchair travel, too? Visit Ocracoke Island, off
the coast of North Carolina, in the Haunted Shell Shop Mysteries.
Or travel to the Scottish
Highlands in the Highland Bookshop Mysteries.
Spend time in northeast
Tennessee in the Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries, two stand-alone mysteries, and a
collection of short stories.
Or travel from Cape Cod on
the east coast to Monterey on the west coast, with a stop in Ohio along the way
in my very gentle mysteries written as Margaret Welch.
Happy reading!
The Boston Globe says Molly MacRae writes “murder with a dose of drollery.” She’s the author of the award-winning, national bestselling Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries and the Highland Bookshop Mysteries. As Margaret Welch, she writes books for Annie’s Fiction. Her short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine and she’s a winner of the Sherwood Anderson Award for Short Fiction. Visit Molly on Facebook and Pinterest and connect with her on Instagram or Bluesky.
Molly. I’ve had sweet scones plenty of times, but a savory one with za’atar and feta sounds perfect with soup or a mug of coffee on a cool fall day.
ReplyDeleteThey're so very good!
DeleteThank you so much for the Za’atar Feta Scones recipe. I do so love scones! While I love the typical sweeter/fruity scones, I do love the savory ones just as much. Can't wait for the opportunity to make these.
ReplyDelete2clowns at arkansas dot net
You're welcome, Kay! Always a pleasure to please you.
DeleteAgree on the scone recipes Molly and these look amazing! I bet my big jar of everything bagel seasoning would taste good in this too!
ReplyDeleteOoh. Yes!
DeleteAbsolutely, Lucy!
DeleteThis recipe is most interesting, especially because I really did not know what Za'atar was, and I had researched it and found so much information that I still did not really understand. From your recipe I now know what spices are included, and will try these savory scones. I love sco es, so your recipe has to be great, Molly! Thank you for the recipe. JOY! Luis at ole dot travel
ReplyDeleteWonderful, Luis! Happy za'atar day to you!
DeleteOhhh, these sound so interesting and delicious. I'm not sure I ever really thought about what constituted Za'tar seasoning before, but it looks so simple to put together and from spices and herbs I use regularly. I do love scones and these look like a unique savory option, especially with soup season beginning. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteHappy soup season, Marcia!
DeleteYou're right, Molly -- I do love za'atar, both the Syrian and Israeli versions. Probably any version. And I love feta! A savory scone is a real treat -- thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteI look forward to trying other versions of za'atar and your recipes.
DeleteFeta and Scones. Two things that I like. But it's hard to imagine them, together. I might try making them, though.
ReplyDeleteGive it a try. I bet you'll like the combination.
ReplyDelete